Cyber security attackers are constantly innovating; their threat activities continue to grow on a global scale. Your organization needs to ensure that it adapts to the realities of the evolving threat landscape and business risks.

Attend this webinar to see John Hultquist, Director of Intelligence Analysis at FireEye, offer:

• An overview of emerging threats from around the world
• Insights into the most impactful threats affecting your cyber security operations
• Expert assessments and implications your organization should consider, provided by the FireEye Threat Intelligence Team

Large corporations aren’t the only targets for sophisticated advanced attacks. In fact, cyber criminals find that small and midsize enterprise (SME) companies are easier targets because their security is not as advanced and they don’t have proper cyber defenses.

FireEye SME customers are more prepared to defend their company’s digital assets. Join us for a live problem-solving webinar based on real-world examples from your peers and learn:

•What best practices will increase cyber awareness
•How to conduct a security assessment to identify gaps and a
strategy
•How to align security needs and reduce vulnerabilities

Register today to gain insights into SME cyber warfare and more effectively protect your business from advanced attacks.

The adoption of Cyber Threat Intelligence (CTI) is increasing across organizations like yours—adding value to all segments of security operations and the business.

When it is better utilized, CTI significantly enhances an organization’s ability to anticipate, identify, respond to, and remediate threats.

Attend this webinar to see cyber security veterans Jeff Berg and Jeff Compton share a case study to show how you can:
•Identify and leverage core competencies to build an intelligence-led strategy
•Develop a best-in-class CTI program framework
•Scope your intelligence function
•Sidestep common pitfalls and resistance
•Establish growth and maturity metrics
•Anticipate and recognize near and long-term wins

REGISTER NOW!

This is part one of a two-part series.

Don’t miss part 2: Emerging Global Cyber Threats on November 2.

To learn more visit: https://www2.fireeye.com/Webinar-Emerging-Global-Threats.html

Antivirus (AV) protection has been the foundation for endpoint security for decades despite its known gaps. To address evolving threats, organizations need an integrated endpoint solution that can fortify their defenses.

On September 26, Jim Waggoner, Sr. Director, Product Management for FireEye will detail:
•Why endpoint security products have not provided complete protection
•Capabilities required for a comprehensive endpoint protection solution
oAV with threat intelligence
oDetection and response
oBehavior and exploit analysis
oVisibility and automation
•How the latest FireEye Endpoint Security solution enables you to go from detection to investigation and remediation quickly, all with a single agent

Attend this webinar as the first step toward a smarter, more adaptive approach to endpoint security.

In 2016 there were 1,093 publicized cyber security breaches. That’s a 40% increase from 2015. Given this era’s up surge in breach activity, it’s no longer about whether you’ll be breached. It’s how you’ll respond when you are breached. Organizations with a well-designed response capability are better off.

Join Troy Scavella, FireEye Principal Consultant and Ahmet Rifki, Sr. Consultant, for our webinar on July 20. They will cover several topics including:

•Six primary areas of focus for an effective response plan
•Best practices for each of those areas
•Examples of how deficiencies in any area reduce an organization’s ability to effectively detect and respond to a cyber security incident, whether targeted or opportunistic

Join Jeff Berg, Sr. Manager of Cyber Threat Intelligence, and Brad Bell, Mandiant Principal Consultant, as they share the role of cyber threat intelligence in strategic security consulting services and why services based on compliance-based best practices and industry standards may not be an effective way to protect your organization against a rapidly evolving threat landscape.

Learn more about APT32 (OceanLotus Group), a Southeast Asian cyber espionage group threatening multi-national companies operating in Vietnam. After long-term monitoring and response of their activities, FireEye has given this threat actor the newest APT designation.

Join Nick Carr, Sr. Manager of Incident Response, as he shares how Mandiant, iSIGHT Intelligence and FireEye as a Service teams reveal:

• Who is part of APT32, where they are based, whom they target and how they operate
• Advice on how to defend against, hunt for and respond to APT32
• How your organization can improve your ability to detect, prevent and remediate APT32 attacks

Although FireEye Network Security is ready to use out-of-the-box, simplicity does not imply a lack of sophistication. There may be a variety of capabilities that practitioners can take advantage of when maximizing the value of their Network Security solution.

In this webinar, we present variety of tips, tricks, and secrets collected from FireEye engineers, architects, incident responders, and analysts to:

Today’s endpoint security products do what they were designed to do, but they still leave gaps in protection. Comprehensive endpoint protection requires prevention, AV, endpoint detection and response (EDR) and other capabilities. Even when organizations adopt multiple point products, there are still gaps in their endpoint protection.

Some companies tout “next-generation endpoint security,” but what does that mean? Jim Waggoner, Sr. Director of Endpoint Product Management at FireEye will tell you how to make sure your next-generation endpoint security solution is delivering a comprehensive. In this webinar, you will:

> Learn about the current endpoint security landscape and the challenges it poses
> Find out what makes EDR capabilities valuable
> Understand why threat intelligence is important and how it affects endpoint threat detection and prevention
> Discover why a single endpoint agent should include (1) Multiple detection and prevention engines, (2) Integrated workflows from detection to investigation to remediation, and (3) Scalable, multiple form factors and breadth of OS support

Government networks, critical infrastructure and data are under a constant state of attack. The nature of these threats evolve on a daily basis. Hacktivists, nation states and cyber criminals push people, processes and technologies that make up Government cyber defenses to their breaking points.

In this webinar, Tony Cole, Vice President and Global Government Chief Technology Officer at FireEye, will be sharing how to:

-- Interpret and respond to trends in adversary capabilities and motivations.
-- Integrate and apply cyber intelligence to reduce risk, cost and operational overhead.
-- Improve readiness and response to minimize the impact of a breach.

Learn how you can apply best practices in intelligence-led security into your defenses.

Cyber truths and CEOs
Security industry experts say that the nature and complexity of today’s cyberattacks are beyond the scope of even the largest companies. We’ve seen the headline making news. Big brand companies once thought to be impenetrable, have fallen victim to targeted cyberattacks inflicting significant financial damages to their businesses.

Financial fall out and executive reputation
Such breaches are hitting corporations where it hurts the most: the bottom line. A prominent bank recently felt the staggering loss of $81 million resulting from a breach.

Elevate and propagate
Battling hackers, state actors, and sophisticated cybercrime organizations may seem like a never-ending, daunting task.

Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA) is the standard for protecting sensitive systems and credentials. What once was limited to physical tokens and keycodes has expanded into digital tokens, phone applications, and password vaults, all in the effort to offer additional safeguards for critical access points like VPN connectivity and system administrator accounts.

While MFA is now an industry-standard security practice, monitoring and protecting these implementations from exploitation is not widely practiced.

Gathered from the trenches of both our Incident Responders and Red Teamers, here is a quick introduction to the problems faced with common MFA systems, the ways real-world attackers (e.g. APT28 & ATP29) and our Red Team have bypassed or subverted them, and some techniques your team can use to further protect the multi-factor keys to your kingdom.

Major events of 2016 have created great uncertainty about the future, but in cyber security one thing is certain: Some attacks and crimes will continue and new challenges will emerge.

What new developments in cyber security should you expect in 2017?
Join us to hear from some of FireEye top experts about our predictions for 2017 which draw from our executive team, Mandiant incident responders, FireEye iSIGHT Intelligence and FireEye Labs. These insights include:

•What investments in security organizations will make in 2017
•Which industry or type of organization might unexpectedly become a target of threat groups in 2017
•How threat groups will continue to target industrial control systems (ICS) in the near future
•What the future hold for less security-mature regions in Asia Pacific and EMEA

Register today to understand what lies ahead, so you can prepare to stay one step ahead of cyber security threats.

Register today to watch this free encore presentation from the 2016 FireEye Government Forum featuring Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe. Watch from the convenience of your computer as Governor McAuliffe discusses the importance of making cyber security a priority at the state and federal level, particularly as cyber attacks are on the increase.

Additional topics discussed include:
• What Virginia is doing to address the cyber skills gap, and fill job openings
• Cyber challenges facing state and federal agencies
• Steps Virginia has taken to increase its investment in cyber security
• How and why he wants to make Virginia the cyber capital of America

Most security programs are understaffed and overwhelmed with alerts, often defined by processes that rely on manual intervention and containment. They must keep pace with attackers who have access to intellectual resources, computing power and the backbone of the fastest digital delivery networks.

Security orchestration levels the battlefield by bringing together disparate technologies and incident handling processes into a single console and facilitates processes with automation. The goal is to improve response time, reduce risk exposure and maintain consistent security processes.

Join this webinar with Paul Nguyen, VP of Orchestration and Integration at FireEye and guest speaker Joseph Blankenship of Forrester to learn what orchestration really is, how to use it, and how to recognize a quality orchestration solution. You’ll discover:

•Why we are seeing a rise in security orchestration
•Where the market is movingHow to get the most out of orchestration
•Which orchestration capabilities are essential and which are differentiators
•What drivers and functional capabilities will define the market
•How to best evaluate and deploy orchestration solutions

Register today for the latest on orchestration from FireEye and Forrester experts.

In a rapidly evolving threat landscape with the realities of limited security program resources, it can be difficult for organizations to know what the most critical risks and exposures are, presently and looking forward. While most organizations recognize the importance of cyber threat intelligence (CTI), Mandiant consulting frequently finds organizations have limited capabilities to operationalize CTI throughout all aspects of their security program.

A recent online poll conducted by FireEye about the operational use of CTI found that 84% of responders use threat intelligence for business decision-making. 67% use it to make decisions about resources and security tools while 17% said they use it for risk assessment on new business initiatives. 17% don’t use it at all.

In this webinar, Jeff Berg, Senior Manager of Mandiant’s Cyber Threat Intelligence Services, discusses the role of intelligence in cyber security programs and steps organizations can take to transform security operations to be intelligence-led, so they can continuously adapt to the threat landscape, and ultimately infuse intelligence capabilities across the entire organization for informed decision making.

Modern cyber attackers are sophisticated, well-funded, well-organized and use highly-targeted techniques that leave technology-only security strategies exposed. To identify and stop attackers, organizations need to understand how they think, how they work, and what they want. Why? Because today, the most serious data breaches and disruptions result from well-planned, complex attacks that target specific companies or industries. Bolster your defenses with a proactive, forward-looking approach to security. Join our live webcast, Tuesday, November 15 at 2:00pm ET to learn:

Hunt advanced, tiered attacks lying in wait within your systems. Prioritize the most relevant threats amidst 1,000s of daily security alerts. Join us live and discover how savvy organizations operationalize intelligence up and down the organization to preempt attack, inform strategy and more.

Advanced threats continue to grow in severity, complexity and reach as threat actors expand their attacks to hit soft targets. Adding to this, as business workloads move to the cloud, and as shadow IT continues to proliferate, unforeseen security gaps expose new vectors for exploit and abuse.

Attacks are not just targeting the core of a network, nor are they limited to just large scale enterprises. More and more, threat actors are aiming at vulnerable endpoints, distributed network environments and porous perimeter defenses. To combat this, security solutions need to be as agile as today’s threat actors.

In this webinar, we will discuss the changing threat landscape and how today’s threat actors and advanced malware are impacting businesses of all sizes and types. Additionally, we will examine new security solutions and deployment models that provide agility, flexibility and widespread protective reach that scales and grows with IT and security needs.

Cybersecurity awareness is growing as more organizations learn they are vulnerable to an attack. While compliance with regulatory and security audit requirements provides a starting point, it alone will not keep the organization safe. An effective security program needs to be multifaceted, integrating people, processes and technologies across all layers of the organization. The specifics vary due to industry, size and geographic presence, as well the level of risk the organization is willing to accept.

Mandiant Sr. Manager Tim Appleby will discuss the benefits of proactive preparedness and 10 key areas that should be considered in order to form a holistic security program, and discuss how priorities can vary based on industry, size and geography.

Are you prepared?
It’s headline news. Cyber attackers are increasingly more sophisticated and data breaches are becoming common place. Some say “it’s not a question of if you’ll be breached, but when”. You need a plan.

Even the most security-conscious organizations are not prepared for the necessary actions needed to gain control after a cyberattack. Preparing an emergency response communication plan keeps stakeholders informed following a breach. Taking an early communication approach will combat rumor and conjecture. The breach is now a business problem. From employees and customers to partner and suppliers – people need to be confident the situation is being addressed, managed, and resolved.

Communication is key.
Smart organizations view their security crisis-communication plan as an ongoing necessity. Get ahead of the reactive situation and decrease the uncertainty. Involve the company’s top leaders across the cross-functional organization. Create a framework for answering questions honestly and with integrity. Share information up front and often. Frequent detailed communication couple with action timelines creates confidence.

Get operational in real time.
You can’t control the communication cycle without having done some work in advance. A well-developed crisis response plan with different scenarios will train your team to operate in real time when the inevitable occurs. You can take control of the situation with timely communications.

Be prepared. Join us for our upcoming webinar to learn how to build a strong crisis-communication foundation for your organization.